Approaching the legal profession through the lens
of cultural history, Wes Pue explores the social roles that lawyers
imagined for themselves in England and its empire from the
late-eighteenth to the early twentieth century. Each chapter focuses on a
moment when lawyers sought to reshape their profession while at the
same time imagining they were shaping nation and empire in the process.
As an exploration of the relationship between legal professionals and
liberalism, this book draws attention to recurrent tensions in between
how lawyers have best assured their own economic well-being while
simultaneously advancing the causes of liberty, cultural authority,
stability, and continuity.

Check back at the UBC Press website (here) for more information as it becomes available.

[Professor Pue is one of our most thoughtful and acute historians of the legal profession. I just placed my order! DRE]